Here you go, this is a fairly traditional recipe.
2 lbs. lean pork
2 onions chopped pretty fine
1/2 bunch green onions chopped
1-2 tablespoons minced garlic (comes in jars in the produce section)
1/2 bunch parsley, chopped fine
1/2 teaspoon thyme
2 bay leaves
t teaspoon salt, or to taste
1 teaspoon ground white pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne
2 cups water (approx., see instructions below)
3 cups cooked rice
4 twenty inch long sausage casings
1 bell pepper chopped pretty fine
Chop the pork and cook. Grind the pork, put in a pot with everything else EXCEPT the rice, add enough water to meet the level of the ingredients, bring to a boil, then cover and simmer for ten minutes.
Discard bay leaves, put ingredients in a bowl and mix with rice. Taste and adjust seasonings if needed.
Rinse casings well to remove the brine solution, tie one end and run mixture through a stuffer and into casings, twisting every six inches or however long you want each link. (There are some YouTube videos on stuffing sausage and boudin, but none are very good)
I backed off on the cayenne a bit because some regions of the country aren't used to the amount of seasonings we use down here.
Like I said before, the good thing about this, as opposed to regular sausage, is that the ingredients are cooked when they are mixed, so you can taste and adjust. Also, you can use just about any meat. I like to mix venison and pork. Some call for liver in addition to the pork, which is probably more traditional, but I can't stand liver or even the smell of it.
If you haven't stuffed sausage before, just go easy and you'll get it. Also, opening one end of the casing, placing under the faucet and running water through it will help untwist it. This makes it easier to load onto the stuffer nozzle.
This is a good boudin, as good or better than any I've had in Ms or south La.
Oh yea, the reason you never see boudin rouge? Because it's nasty! I tasted it once, don't remember where or when. It was such a bad experience that my brain took over and blocked most of my memory of it as a safety precaution for my overall mental health.